ChatterBank2 mins ago
Campervan Seized By Police Scotland
I bought a camper in September last year on 10th January the police came to my door and said the camper was a suspected stolen camper.6months later and after many calls letters citizens advice,mp,Ppc,lawyer ect and no proof given to me as to where when ect the camper was stolen I received a letter from police scotland paralegal saying the enquiries are now complete and the the question of the return of this property needs to be addressed,you have 14 days from today whether you are making a claim to have this property returned to you.
Does anyone have any idea what this means in legal speak
Does anyone have any idea what this means in legal speak
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Patch25. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Were I you, I'd really want an answer as to whether you are entitled to compensation because they deprived you of your property's use for six months. I'd also want to make sure that it's returned in the same condition it was in when they took it. They are very good at tearing things to bits in the search for evidence, not so good at putting them back.
And mind they don't deliver it back to you and then nick you for having an untaxed/uninsured car with no MOT on the road outside your house. I'd say they should at least MOT it so you can tax then insure it before they return it.
And mind they don't deliver it back to you and then nick you for having an untaxed/uninsured car with no MOT on the road outside your house. I'd say they should at least MOT it so you can tax then insure it before they return it.
Yes it means it was not a stolen van so you can have it back.
I am astounded that you have to apply to have your own property returned though. I would have expected them to deliver it to you.
Little if any chance of compensation though unless you can prove the police acted illegally in seizing it in the first place.
I am astounded that you have to apply to have your own property returned though. I would have expected them to deliver it to you.
Little if any chance of compensation though unless you can prove the police acted illegally in seizing it in the first place.
-- answer removed --
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.